Archive for April, 2009

Comrades

Thursday, April 30th, 2009

I bought this book in a local bookshop just before finishing Young Stalin and started reading it 2 weeks ago. I must say it is a breathless read. I’m very curious about the real story of communism in Russia and other countries because I only remember official USSR communist party interpretation from my school years in 80s. In Moscow University we also had a subject called the History of Communist Party of the Soviet Union (KPSS) and the textbook was called “kirpich” (a brick).

Comrades: Communism: A World History

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- Dmitry Vostokov @ LiterateScientist.com -

The Coming of the Third Reich

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009

I bought a handsome hardcover Richard Evans’s Third Reich history trilogy recently and started reading the first volume in parallel to Michael Burleigh’s The Third Reich: A New History. I would say it is a very smooth historical narrative, in a simple and clear language and it is very detailed and not Hitler-centered like Rise And Fall Of The Third Reich. It has plenty of maps and this is very important to me because I can’t always recall where a rive or a region is located. Looking forward to reading next volumes when I finish this one. I put a link to the paperback edition of the first volume here because bounded hardback trilogy is very expensive and hard to find:

The Coming of the Third Reich

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- Dmitry Vostokov @ LiterateScientist.com -

Conceptual Mathematics

Tuesday, April 28th, 2009

This is a book that I noticed in a bookshop 6 years ago. I was curious by its title and front cover because at school I was interested in foundations of mathematics and abstract algebra ideas. I bought this book and from it I first heard of and learnt about category theory.

Conceptual Mathematics: A First Introduction to Categories

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Very accessible and highly recommended as the first introduction but it requires probably the second reading if you are not used to mathematical abstractions. Fortunately there is the second edition coming after almost 15 years that seems have extra 50 pages added and I’m looking forward to reading it too.

Conceptual Mathematics: A First Introduction to Categories (Second Edition)

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- Dmitry Vostokov @ LiterateScientist.com -

Understanding the Infinite

Monday, April 27th, 2009

This book I bought a few years ago but only started reading 4 months ago and just finished:

Understanding the Infinite

I must say that it was not a light read and it requires certain mathematical maturity beyond undergraduate courses. The first part deals with Cantor and Zermelo set theories and axioms. It is very dry sometimes and chapters are long which was not good for me because I was only reading 10 - 12 pages per week while commuting. In many places the author assumes that a reader already knows a lot about logic and set theory, for example, at the end, he devotes a page or two about Putman modal logic and uses freely its quantifiers without explaining them. Some glossary at the end would have greatly benefited this book. What I found clarifying is the fact that there are two foundations of set theory: the notions of logical and combinatorial collections. For the latter the Axiom of Choice is self-evident and is no longer controversial. The second part starting from chapter VI is more philosophical and concerns with epistemology and ontology of the infinite. At least at the beginning it clarifies the difference between potential and actual infinity. In the middle we see the use of schemas to avoid quantifiers. At the end of the book the author discusses the theory of indefinite large and small, its extrapolations to infinite and provides examples from mathematical analysis. The main theme of the book, as I understand it, is that our intuition about infinity arises from intuitive understanding of indefinitely large sets, their hierarchies and extrapolations.

- Dmitry Vostokov @ LiterateScientist.com -

More Than a Theory

Wednesday, April 22nd, 2009

When stumbled upon this book on Amazon earlier this month when I was looking at the list of recently published science books I recalled how creationists and proponents of intelligent design are instantly dismissed in many science books that never discuss them in any details. In the description this book promised to review various approaches and even to suggest the testable model. The latter intrigued me and without fear of being accused as a non-scientist I bought it. Just started reading and if I find any flaw I would revise this post accordingly. So far it provides description, motivation and origin of many creationist / IDM versions. Should be read even if you are a confirmed scientist.

More Than a Theory: Revealing a Testable Model for Creation

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I’m a founder of Memory Religion so I have nothing to loose after reading this book. 

- Dmitry Vostokov @ LiterateScientist.com -

Evolution: The First Four Billion Years

Tuesday, April 21st, 2009

Having read Darwin’s Dangerous Idea book I was looking for more comprehensive book and a few months ago I stumbled across this 1,000 page volume in one of bookshops in the centre of Dublin:

Evolution: The First Four Billion Years

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After browsing it for 10 seconds I bought it without any hesitation. Richly illustrated, its structure reminds me another excellent volume composed from review articles, short encyclopedic and biographic entries: The Princeton Companion to Mathematics.

- Dmitry Vostokov @ LiterateScientist.com -

General Chemistry

Monday, April 20th, 2009

I have never read any Chemistry book in English in my life although I studied Chemistry in Moscow State University and was trained as a chemist. To refresh my knowledge of Chemistry (last time I studied it in 1999, 10 years ago) I bought a few books and one of them is:

General Chemistry

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I found it a good refreshing read and at the same time learning how terminology I used to learn in Russian language corresponds to English. Taking advantage of this post I announce here that I also writing a popular book about Chemistry and mathematics that should be released later this year:

Vector Space Chemistry

- Dmitry Vostokov @ LiterateScientist.com -

Young Stalin

Thursday, April 16th, 2009

Interested in Stalin and Stalinism since Perestroika I bought this as a hardback as soon as it were published and then last year I got the same book in paperback as a present. The pressure of two books forced me to make a decision to start reading and now I’m more than two-thirds through it. I must say this is a very interested read. In Russia, during Brezhnev era, before Perestroika, I only heard whispers about Stalin epoch and, of course, didn’t now anything about Stalin youth and his involvement in the revolution, for example, the fact that most of all officials in 1917 - 1953 were his friends and acquaintances, and historical and personal factors that contributed to the development of Terror, like Conspiratia, banditry and murky world of double Okhrana agents. I also have the book by the same author “Stalin: The Court of the Red Tsar” that seems to be the follow-up although was written published earlier and I’m looking forward to reading it as soon as I finish “Young Stalin” book.

Young Stalin (Vintage)

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- Dmitry Vostokov @ LiterateScientist.com -